The Edward

14 U.S. 261, 4 L. Ed. 86, 1 Wheat. 261, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 328
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 16, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 14 U.S. 261 (The Edward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Edward, 14 U.S. 261, 4 L. Ed. 86, 1 Wheat. 261, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 328 (1816).

Opinion

Washington, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court, and, after stating the facts, proceeded as follows :

Three questions have been made and discussed by the counsel, 1st. Whether the circuit court could, upon the appeal, allow the introduction of a new allegation into the information by' way of amendment ? 2d. Whether the omission to give the bond required by the 3d section of the act of the 28th of June, 1809, subjected the vessel to forfeiture ? and if it did, then, 3d. Whether the information, which alleges the voyage to Liverpool to have commenced at Savannah, is supported by the evidence in the cause, and whether the sentence below ought not to be reversed for this reason, although the court should be satisfied that the ship departed from Charleston for Liverpool without giving the bond required ?

Upon the first question it is contended, for the claimant, that the circuit court has only appellate jurisdiction in cases of this nature, and that to allow the introduction of a new allegation, would be, in fact, to originate the cause in the circuit court. Thi* question appears to be fully decided by the cases of the Caroline and Emily, determined in this court. These were informations inrem, under the slave trade act, and the opinion of this court was',.that the evidence was sufficient to show a breach of the law; but that the informations were not sufficiently cer *265 tain tó authorize a decree. The sentence of the circuit court was, therefore, reversed, and the cause remanded to that court, with-directions to allow the informations to be amended. ■ But even- if an amendment would be improper if it stated a different case from that which was presented to the district court, the objection would not apply to this case, in which the offence, though more definitely laid in the second allegation than it was in the first, is yet substantially thé same. In both of them the charge is, departing from Savannah to a foreign interdicted port, without giving bond, and the amendment, in substance, merely states the particular foreign port to which the vessel was destined. -

The next question is, whether the omission to give the bond required by. the third section of the act of the 28th of June, 1809, subjected the vessel to forfeiture? It is -contended, by the claimant’s counsel, that after the end of the session of congress in which this law'passed, there were no foreign ports either permitted or interdicted by law, inasmuch as the embargo laws which prohibited exportations from the United States to foreign countries, would then stand repealed, by force of the 19th sectiop of the act of the 1st of March, 1809, to interdict the commercial intercourse with Great Britain and France, and. the 2d section .of the above act of the 28th of June. That all the ports of the world being thus permitted to the commerce of the United States,, no subject would remain on which the. 3d section, would operate ; and, consequently, there could be no necessity for giving a bond not to go to an interdicted port.

*266 An attentive consideration, however, of' the two acts above mentioned, will show that the argument is not well founded. The 3d section ot the act of the 28th of June, 1809, declares, that during the continuance of that act, no vessel, not within the exceptions therein stated, shall be permitted to depart for a foreign port, with which commercial intercourse has not been, or may not be, permitted by virtue of this act, or the act of the 1st of March, 1809. And if bound to a foreign port with which commercial intercourse has been, or may be, permitted, still she shall not be allowed to depart without bond being given, with condition not to proceed to any port with which commercial intercourse is not thus permitted, nor be directly of indirectly engaged, during the voyage, in any trade with such port. This law* was' in full force at the time the offence charged in this information is alleged to have been committed.

' "If, then, there was any country with which commercial intercourse was interdicted, and would continue to be so after the end of the session, during which this law was passed, it seems to be admitted in the argument, that a vessel destined to a foreign permitted port would be liable to' forfeiture, unless the above bond had been given. To ascertain whether there was any such country, it will be necessary "to inquire what is the true meaning of the term commercial intercourse ? No higher or more satisfactory authority upon this subject need be resorted to than the legislature itself, by which this act was passed.

The act of the 1st of March, 1809, which is entitled, “ An act to interdict the commercial intercourse *267 between the United States and Great Britain,” &c., contains nineteen sections. The first ten (exclusive of the first, which denies to the vessels of those noun-tries the privilege of entering the ports and harbours of the United States) forbid the importation into the United States of the products and manufactures of Great Britain and Finance, of of any other part of the world, if brought from the ports of either of those countries. The 12th section - repeals, vafter the 15th of March, 1809, all the embargo laws, except as they relate to Great Britain and France; and the 19th section repeals them., after the end of the succeeding session of congress, as to all the world. The 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, and 1,8th sections are intended to provide securities for enforcing the non-importation system established by this law; and the 17th section repealslhe former non-importation law of April, 1806.

Hence, it appears, that the commercial intercourse which this law was intended to interdict, consisted of importations from Great Britain and France, and of the products and manufactures of those countries, and of eXportatiqnp to them. In the 11th section it is called the trade of the United States, suspended by that act and the embargo laws,' which trade the president is authorized to renews by his proclamation, upon a certain contingency, and in pursuance of this power, he, di.d, accordingly, renew it with Great, Britain in Appil, 1809.

Thus stooil the commercial intercourse of the United States with foreign nations, at the commencement of the extraordinary session of congress, which *268 commenced in May, 1809 ; permitted by the above law, both as to exportations and importations with all the world, except Great Britain arid France,, and their dependencies; and, as to them, interdicted in both respects as to France, and. permitted with Great Britain, by virtue of the president’s proclamation. But, as the law of the 1st of March would expire, by its own limitation, after the end of the May session, whereby, not only exportations, but the importations forbidden by that act, in relation to France, would, become lawful; the 1st section of the act, of the 28th of June, 1809, revives the whole non-importation system, except so far as it had been permitted to Great Britian by the proclamation; and the. 2d section declares,. in effect, that the embargo laws, which were repealed by the 12th and 19th sections of the act of the 1st.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 U.S. 261, 4 L. Ed. 86, 1 Wheat. 261, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-edward-scotus-1816.